Southeast Asia a 'hotspot' for antibiotic abuse, FAO official says
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[January 31, 2018] By
Amy Sawitta Lefevre
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Overuse and misuse of
antibiotics in food is rife in Southeast Asia, a Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) official said on Wednesday, warning of serious risks
for people and animals as bacterial infections become more resistant to
treatment.
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The official from the United Nations' food agency issued the warning
on the sidelines of an international meeting in Bangkok focused on
antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
FAO's Chief Veterinary Officer Juan Lubroth told Reuters in Bangkok
that threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) was magnified in
places, like Asia's megacities, where there was high population
growth and intense food and agriculture production.
"Here in Southeast Asia … we would consider it a hotpot because of
the population growth, urbanization dynamics, the production of
food," Lubroth told Reuters.
A report published on Monday by the World Health Organization said
that a new global surveillance system had found widespread
occurrence of antibiotic resistance among 500,000 people with
suspected bacterial infections across 22 countries.
"Some of the world's most common – and potentially most dangerous –
infections are proving drug-resistant," Marc Sprenger, director of
WHO's Antimicrobial Resistance Secretariat, said in a statement.
A 2016 report by economist Jim O'Neill, commissioned by the British
government, projects $100 trillion in losses by 2050 if nothing is
done to reverse the trend, and estimated that the annual toll
resulting from AMR will climb to 10 million deaths in the next 35
years.
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"Ninety percent of those deaths would be in the developing world,
and that is scary," Lubroth said.
He said the FAO advocates educating farmers about the dangers of
using antibiotics to promote growth in animals, and stronger
enforcement of rules governing food production.
"It's not only about having the rules in black and white, they need
to be applied."
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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